Monday, 16 September 2024

PRESIDENT'S YOUNG PERFORMERS CONCERT / Singapore Symphony Orchestra / Review

 


PRESIDENT’S YOUNG 
PERFORMERS CONCERT 
Singapore Symphony Orchestra 
Victoria Concert Hall 
Friday (13 September 2024)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 16 September 2024 with the title "Ebullient show at President's Young Performers Concert".

Graced by President Tharman Shanmugaratnam, this year’s President’s Young Performers Concert by the Singapore Symphony Orchestra led by Associate Conductor Rodolfo Barraez was a very accessible programme built around a common theme of youth and precociousness. 


Opening with Felix Mendelssohn’s Overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, this work of genius from a mere 17-year-old was distinguished by feathery light string playing reliving Shakespeare’s realm of fairies and magical spells. Wry humour came in the form of repeated brays, musical representation of Nick Bottoms’ character with a donkey’s head, which was milked for all its worth. 


Two young pianists from Yong Siew Toh Conservatory’s Young Artist Programme, both students of Albert Tiu, had been selected from live auditions to perform for the president. The first was 16-year-old Toby Tan Kai Rong, who was awarded first prize at the 2023 Aarhus International Piano Competition (Denmark), in Sergei Rachmaninov’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini (Op.43). 


Seldom has someone this young left such an indelible imprint on a tried and tested warhorse, supremely confident yet highly nuanced was his memorable reading. Technically unimpeachable, he dispatched the harp-like Variation 11 and treacherously difficult runs of Variation 15 with seeming effortlessness. 


Furthermore, the manner in which he built up famous Variation 18, with restraint and no little rubato before the collective outburst of emotion, was the touch of a master. The work’s thrilling climax and laconic close drew the loudest cheers, to which he reciprocated with Rachmaninov’s “Little Red Riding HoodEtude-Tableaux in A minor (Op.39 No.6) as an exciting encore. 


19-year-old Adrian Tang, 1st prizewinner of the 2023 National Piano & Violin Competition (Senior category) and presently his serving national service, was no less trenchant in Sergei Prokofiev’s youthful First Piano Concerto in D flat major (Op.10). In this heady mix of clashing dissonance and lush lyricism, an explosive energy characterised his opening salvo. Despite almost coming undone with a rash of missed notes, he kept his composure and never faltered thereafter. 


A more than secure technique and steely brilliance ensured this was an exciting 16-minute ride, including a hyper-Romantic central slow section and the concerto’s coruscating and breathless close. His encore of Moritz Moszkowski’s Etincelles (Sparks) was scintillating, after which he was joined by Tan for Aram Khachaturian’s Sabre Dance from the ballet Gayaneh on four hands, a gala of sweeping glissandi


The concert closed with Prokofiev’s First Symphony in D major (Op.25), also known as the Classical Symphony because it was crafted as a pastiche in the manner of the four-movement symphonies of Haydn and Mozart. 


Conducted by Barraez from memory, the first movement was led at a riproaring pace, contrasted with a graceful Larghetto slow movement and a quaint Gavotte dressed up with a generous helping of rubato. A blistering finale brought this enjoyable evening to an ebullient close.



Adrian Tang (who's doing National Service)
and Toby Tan with their teacher, Prof Albert Tiu
of the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory.
Two further pianists who played for the President,
Hao Jia and Pualina Lim were also Albert's Tiudents.
Photo: Goh Kai Cheng (his turn coming soon!)

Review of the same concert that appeared on Bachtrack.com:

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